On the same page as Greg Keener, two rows up from him, at the end of the row, is a picture of a Franklin Regional sophomore. He has half a smile as he looks at the camera. His name is Alex Hribal.

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Hribal is charged with stabbing 21 people, including Keener, April 9 in the hallway at his high school. It was an incident that opened a floodgate of emotions, rattled the so-called "Murrysville bubble" and its sense of security. It left thousands of people wondering why this happened and searching for blame in every corner of the 15668 ZIP code.

But there in the middle of the page, Hribal is just another kid among fewer than 200 others of the FRHS class of 2016. At least, he was.

The decision to keep Hribal in the yearbook was just as much about timing as anything. Assistant Superintendent Mary Catherine Reljac said students' class photos are taken in August and must be submitted to the yearbook company by November. On April 1, the final draft is due.

"In the midst of when that final set of pages was sent and the final approval, we had April 9 happen at Franklin Regional. Most of the yearbook at that point of the year is actually printed and assembled," Reljac said.

A yearbook class actually works on the project all year long and is led by a journalism teacher. After receiving the final proof, the class worked feverishly to add four pages to the end of the yearbook that depict students, victims and staff showing their support, healing and love for one another.

"In a tragedy, in a terrible moment, in our darkest hours, we came together. We emerged FR Strong," Reljac said. "Although the healing process is still continuing and it will continue for years and years and years into the future, I was interested and very proud of our students that what they chose to tell was the strength that they learned through the event and the strength of community with each other."

Some students took to social media to express their concern with Hribal's picture appearing among his sophomore classmates. Junior Nikki Dallo said actual conversations in school tell another story.

"I don't think you can really take him out because his brother is in our school, too. They did the yearbook before the incident," Dallo said.

"We know no matter what we do, there are people it's the right decision for and there are people it's the wrong decision for. So, when you consider how to tell the story of their school year, whether we left a picture in there or took a picture out, for some, each of those situations would have been helpful," Reljac said. "There is no one answer and there is no playbook for how to handle the emotions that everyone is feeling. This is an unprecedented event that we are going through, and it isn't going to go away. We will get further from it and we will learn how to cope with it in new ways, but it doesn't disappear."